I took some of my iris north to my small cottage and made an iris bed last month. Yesterday I get a call from my neighbor that something dug them all up and some of the rhizomes appeared to have been eaten. We have no groundhogs in the area so that particular animal is eliminated. My neighbor thinks the culprit is squirrels. Would squirrels eat iris??? I am told that deer do not like them.

Well I googled this question and what came up was rabbits, moles and voles. It stated that rabbits love eating the rhizomes of iris. I don't think we have any voles but I know we have rabbits and moles. Would milorganite keep them away??

I have loads of rabbits here, and in the winter they will eat the leaves when food is scarce, but otherwise leave them alone. When I plant the new seedlings they love to try to take a bite and pull them out, but then they usually drop them and don't eat them. I've never seen one eat the rhizome though. Ground squirrels will take a bite once in a while.

I am not afraid of an army of lions led by a sheep; I am afraid of an army of sheep led by a lion. - Alexander the Great

I have a lot of squirrels of all kinds including some dark black ones. The reds usually leave when the gray one come but I can watch them chasing each other all about the woods. They have never eaten an iris. I have chased them away from an iris bed as they sort through them looking for more crocus bulbs. Maybe they do not go after my irises because more desirable foods are available.

An apple a day keeps the doctor away.... and everyone else if you throw it hard enough.

WABBITS and squirrels! they usually only yank my transplants in not rooted. The story of my summer 2016. Squirrels want the rhizomes because they assume they're nuts. Rabbits are just pricks of nature and don't want irises to survive.

If the roots are eaten that could be moles or voles. They will eat the roots. Never had a rabbit eat a rhizome. Nibble on Japanese iris leaves rarely. With leaves you can spray them with ground cayenne pepper in an oil solution. I suppose sprinkling the pepper on the rhizomes would work too. Not sure I would use oil with the rhizome.

Moles are carnivores. They eat worms, grubs and adult insects in the garden. Damage you find on plants is unlikely to have been made by a mole. Voles on the other hand do eat plants and they use mole tunnels to navigate. That makes moles undesirable because they pave the way for the voles to your juicy bulbs, potatoes, rhizomes, grass and even tree bark after all the lovely garden bulbs are gone and when the grass is in winter dormant stage.

An apple a day keeps the doctor away.... and everyone else if you throw it hard enough.

I have heard that blood meal will deter rabbits, but I haven't used it. It might be too high in protein for iris if you get it too close. I used to plant marigolds around my veggie garden, as rabbits don't like them.

I am not afraid of an army of lions led by a sheep; I am afraid of an army of sheep led by a lion. - Alexander the Great

tveguy3 said:I have heard that blood meal will deter rabbits, but I haven't used it. It might be too high in protein for iris if you get it too close. I used to plant marigolds around my veggie garden, as rabbits don't like them.

I tried blood meal to keep out squirrels....I couldn't see where it helped, at all. I *think* the cayenne pepper (ground stuff, not flakes) did more good . I'd also heard that "big cat" scat would deter them...preditor smell....but, While I haven't tried BIG cat scat (lions, or tigers !!), the "neighbor hood cat scat doesn't deter ANYTHING, but me !! Nothing like picking up a dried "rhizome" that ISN'T a rhizome !!